Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, November/December
1996, page 37
Talking Turkey
With Friends Like Qaddafi, Erbekan Doesn't Need
Enemies
by James M. Dorsey
Islamist Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan marked in
early October his first 100 days in office in much the same way
that he has governed staunchly secular Turkey since coming to office
last June: he issued a plethora of contradictory messages with no
real change in his country's pro-Western, free-market policies.
Erbakan spent his 100th day as prime minister on an
African tour of outcast states Libya and Nigeria that has turned
into a foreign policy nightmare, with Libyan leader Col. Muammar
Qaddafi using a joint news conference with his Turkish guest to
demand the creation of an independent Kurdish state, partly on Turkish
soil.
Turkey has been fighting a 12-year-old war against
rebels of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which is demanding
greater autonomy for the country's estimated 12 million Kurds. Some
21,000 people have died in the war so far.
Qaddafi is the second Islamic leader in as many months
to dent seriously Erbakan's effort to strengthen relations with
Muslim nations while at the same time maintaining Turkey's close
ties to the West.
Earlier, Iraqi President Saddam Hussain foiled Erbakan's
attempts to achieve security co-operation with Iraq, Syria and Iran,
by intervening in internecine Kurdish fighting in allied-protected
northern Iraq. The intervention sparked September's U.S. missile
attacks on Iraq.
As a result, Erbakan faced as this magazine went to
print a censure motion in parliament aimed at toppling his three-month-
old coalition government. Opposition leaders said Erbakan's visit
to Libya had severely damaged Turkey's international image and demonstrated
that the prime minister's pro-Islamic Refah (Welfare) Party was
incapable of governing the country.
"Our nation has not fallen into such humiliation
in its foreign relations since it was founded,"the left-wing
Republican People's Party (CHP) said in a written request to parliament
for the no-confidence vote in the government.
The United States, which sharply rebuked Erbakan for
visiting Libya, is likely to take a certain degree of pleasure from
Qaddafi's turning of the tables on Erbakan.
Erbakan visited Libya on his second major trip abroad
since coming to office in June. On his first trip, Erbakan concluded
a $20 billion gas supply deal with Iran, only days after President
Clinton signed a law severely restricting the energy dealings of
both U.S. and non-U.S. companies with both Iran and Libya.
From Libya, Erbakan traveled to Nigeria at the very
moment that Secretary of State Warren Christopher was touring Africa
in a bid to achieve a consensus on tightening sanctions against
that African nation for its abuse of human rights.
Erbakan actually has done little to loosen NATO member
Turkey's ties to the West.
Despite these seemingly provocative moves, Erbakan
actually has done little to loosen NATO member Turkey's ties to
the West, and particularly to the United States. Since coming to
office, he has helped persuade the Turkish parliament to extend
the mandate of Operation Provide Comfort, the umbrella for the U.S.-led
air operation based in southeastern Turkey to protect Iraqi Kurds
against the wrath of Saddam Hussain. Also despite predictions to
the contrary, Erbakan has maintained military cooperation between
Turkey and Israel.
At the same time, Turkey is negotiating with the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) a resumption of support for economic reform
and a stabilization program that would turn the country's ailing
economy around. An IMF delegation scheduled a three-week visit to
Ankara starting in mid-October, while the World Bank planned to
send a team in November to discuss privatization.
Turkey is seeking to reach an accord with the IMF
for a new stand-by arrangement which it hopes will increase confidence
in international financial markets in the Turkish economy. State
Minister Ufuk Soylemez says Turkey has to lower its current annual
inflation rate of 80 percent, realize structural reforms, close
budget deficits and provide stability in fiscal policies.
"For this reason, the government should reach
an accord on a program to be implemented and this program should
receive support from international financial institutions,"
Soylemez said.
Such a program would be a far cry from the populist
policies Erbakan advocated before coming to power. If implemented,
Erbakan would be succeeding where his secular predecessors have
failed.
Erbakan's controversial foreign trips were in part
designed to placate his followers, who had expected that once he
came to office he would overhaul a seemingly decaying political
system and displace an elite that seemed more concerned about its
own welfare than that of the country.
A Bitter Disappointment
In fact, the Turkey of today looks very much as it
did when Erbakan took power on June 28 and this has been a bitter
disappointment to the many Refah voters attracted more by his promises
to remake the social order than by his Islamist beliefs.
If Erbakan indeed goes for an IMF-approved economic
program, his supporters may well find that things are going to get
a lot worse before they get better. Erbakan has hinted that he may
opt for an Argentinean turn-around model in which he would peg the
Turkish lira to the dollar on a one-to-one basis, plunging the country
first into deep crisis to allow it to come back sanitized and ready
to compete.
Some analysts don't think Erbakan will have the time
to carry out such a program. With his foreign policy in shambles,
newspaper columnist Bilal Cetin quips: "Refah was not ready
for power. It is acting as if it were still in opposition. I do
not see another 100 days added to the life of his government."
Although talk of the government's demise may be premature,
the fact is that the Qaddafi outburst during Erbakan's visit to
Libya has brought his government to the lowest point of its tenure
so far. |